Australia bars travel to Mosul ahead of planned offensive

Matt Siegel

3 Min Read

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia on Monday barred its citizens from traveling to Mosul in northern Iraq, in a push to combat what the government calls growing radicalization among young Australian Muslims, some of whom have fought overseas with militant groups.

Kurdish Peshmerga fighters take position with their weapons on the outskirts of Mosul January 26, 2015. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari

The announcement by Foreign Minster Julie Bishop comes ahead of a planned offensive, perhaps as soon as April or May, to retake Mosul with a contingent of U.S.-trained Iraqi and Kurdish force of 20,000 to 25,000.

It is the second time Australia has used a tough new law barring overseas travel to specific areas, following a ban on the province of Raqqa in Syria, a key strategic hub for Islamic State.

“The government is determined to stop Australians joining the terrorist conflict in Iraq and Syria and supporting terrorist organizations,” Bishop said in a statement.

Last month the Pentagon said it had sent 10,000 U.S. M-16 rifles and other military supplies worth about $17.9 million to Iraq as U.S. troops pushed ahead with training and supplying Iraqi security forces battling Islamic State fighters.

Islamic State militants were recently shown in videos destroying priceless antiquities from Mosul, using sledgehammers and power drills on 3,000-year-old sculptures and statues.

Under tough new security powers won by conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott in October, Australian citizens can face up to a decade in prison for overseas travel to areas declared off limits.

The move was part of a broader crackdown on what Abbott calls a growing threat posed by Australians radicalized whilst fighting overseas with Islamist militant groups such as Islamic State, or various al Qaeda-affiliated groups.

In September, the United Nations demanded that all countries make it a serious criminal offence for citizens to travel abroad to fight with militant groups, or recruit and fund others to do so, in a move sparked by the rise of Islamic State.

Security analysts have put the number of foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria, traveling from scores of countries around the world, in the thousands.

Australia is on high alert for attacks by radicalized Muslims or home-grown militants returning from fighting in the Middle East. In December two hostages and a radical self-styled sheikh who had sought to align himself with Islamic State were killed in a Sydney hostage siege.

Abbott, who recently warned that the balance between freedom and security “may have to shift”, is also pushing controversial data retention laws he says are needed to tackle security and criminal threats.